New York Post

THINK IT'S BAD NOW?

Things will get worse if Biden doesn’t reverse course

- JAMES JAY CARAFANO James Jay Carafano directs the Heritage Foundation’s research on national-security and foreign-relations issues.

THE rush of illegal immigrants at the border looks worse than rush-hour traffic on the Triborough Bridge — pre-COVID. It will only get worse. It might be unfixable.

How bad is it? The numbers from knowledgea­ble folks inside the Department of Homeland Security, who are not authorized to publicly disclose the informatio­n, say it is about 6,000 a day. Odds are that number is going to get bigger. We are headed toward 200,000 illegal aliens entering each month. Former Department of Homeland Security officials who have looked over all the policy changes President Biden has ordered estimate his team will allow 90 percent of them to remain in the United States.

The Biden team has also ordered changes in policies for Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, the part of Homeland Security responsibl­e for deporting illegal immigrants. The goal, apparently, is to prohibit ICE from detaining and deporting most illegal immigrants. Since visa overstays account, by some estimates, for up to 40 percent of the unlawfully present population, that is going to add to the problem as well.

In just a year or so, a 20 percent or more increase in the undocument­ed population is not an unreasonab­le guess.

Sound unreasonab­ly pessimisti­c? Look who is in charge. When asked if he was surprised by the crisis or if he expected it, Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas replied, “I don’t know that I had any particular expectatio­n one way or the other.”

Time out. The guy who was the deputy of Homeland Security under President Barack Obama didn’t know that radical changes to border security would trigger a flood of migrants seeking entry via Mexico? As Biden might put it, C’mon, man.

During the Obama administra­tion, Homeland Security defined a “crisis” as 1,000 people trying to cross a day. In less than a month, the changes implemente­d by the Biden team have triggered six times that number.

It is true that Homeland Security is sending more agents to the border. The Federal Emergency Management Agency was just ordered in. Its people aren’t there to secure the border, though, but to help with the process of providing for illegal immigrants and to set up the infrastruc­ture to move more of them into the US — and to do so faster.

So, yes, it is going to get worse, because no one will stop them. And don’t expect Congress to insist the Biden team enforce immigratio­n law and secure the border either. Lawmakers are too busy trying to pass a raft of amnesty bills that will serve as a clarion call for still more illegal immigratio­n.

Another crucial factor will make it worse: criminal cartels. They’re going to take advantage of every Biden border gaffe to recruit more illegal aliens who pay upwards of tens of thousands of dollars for the privilege of being trafficked into the United States. And the more who make it, the more are en

couraged to make that investment, because the prospects of getting in and staying go up every day.

Here is the good news: As long as Congress can be stopped from making amnesty and open borders the law of the land, this is all fixable. Biden has demonstrat­ed that not enforcing the law is a disaster, but — as the last president showed — even under existing law, the border can be made secure, and we can deport our way out of this problem.

The bottom line is we’ve learned it takes a president to make a border a real border, and it will take a president to end the crisis we’re now facing. Too bad the current one is showing no desire to do so.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? EYEING THE PROMISED LAND: A Mexican family stands on the bank of the Rio Grande in Ciudad Juarez, a point where thousands of migrants have crossed the river into El Paso, Texas.
EYEING THE PROMISED LAND: A Mexican family stands on the bank of the Rio Grande in Ciudad Juarez, a point where thousands of migrants have crossed the river into El Paso, Texas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States